| April 2003 PHILADELPHIA The thimerosal
controversy continues to be the most pressing vaccine safety issue
facing immunization programs today.
There is no doubt that vaccines are effective in reducing
diseases. Because of vaccines, smallpox has been eradicated from the
wild, polio eliminated from most of the world, and diseases such as
diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis and measles, once prevalent killers
of children in the United States, are now rare.
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One of the most difficult challenges
faced by vaccines these days is whether exposure to the
preservative thimerosal, because it contains a form of
mercury known as ethylmercury, can cause neurologic
damage or autism. |
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But now vaccines have become a victim of their own success. Along
with such success of immunization come doubts, about the risk of the
diseases vaccines seek to prevent, but also about the safety of
vaccines in general.
Before vaccines are introduced to U.S. children, they are put
through rigorous clinical trials testing for both efficacy and
safety. The FDA will only license a vaccine after it is proven safe
in its targeted population.
Yet vaccines remain controversial to some parents. A series of
challenges through the media have brought to light serious
allegations about the safety of U.S. children.
One of the most difficult challenges faced by vaccines these days
is whether exposure to the preservative thimerosal, because it
contains a form of mercury known as ethylmercury, can cause
neurologic damage or autism.
Thimerosal was regularly used in vaccines until a 1999
recommendation from the AAP and the CDC called for its removal.
According to reports at that time, the total mercury a child could
be exposed to in the first year of life through
thimerosal-containing vaccines exceeded safe levels of mercury
exposure by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
But the EPA guidelines were intentionally liberal in their
estimation of what constitutes dangerous levels of mercury exposure.
Furthermore, leading vaccine advocates say, the recommendation to
remove thimerosal was based on flawed assumptions, meaning that
thimerosal was never dangerous in the first place.
Still, the removal of the preservative from vaccines was
sensationalized in the media as a conclusion that thimerosal was in
fact dangerous. What started out as a cautionary decision thought to
benefit the American public blew up in the face of the public health
community.
Vaccine manufacturers are now facing the ramifications of that
decision in the form of lawsuits that threaten their ability to stay
in business. As well, parents are now frightened by a backlash of
misinformation campaigns and some are even scared to have their
children immunized.
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The removal of thimerosal
Prior to the introduction of thimerosal, systemic infections from
agents like Staphylococcus aureus were common in vaccine
recipients. But the introduction of thimerosal, a bacteriostatic
agent intended to kill those same bacteria, changed all that,
according to Paul Offit, MD, director of infectious diseases at the
Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, and a professor of pediatrics
at the University of Pennsylvania.
Once we figured out a way to make bacteriostatic agents like
ethylmercury, it really revolutionized our ability to make vaccines
in multidose vials, Offit explained.
Thimerosal was regularly used in vaccines throughout the 20th
century to great success. Secondary bacterial infections in vaccine
recipients dropped dramatically and vaccination coverage rates
soared.
In 1997, when the Food and Drug Modernization Act was passed into
law, federal agencies were required to list all foods and drugs that
contained mercury. The law was part of an overall effort to reduce
unnecessary mercury exposure to U.S. children.
The impetus was certainly noble, said Offit. It was simply a
way to make sure we understood just what contained mercury and how
much mercury it contained.
As a result of that analysis, it was found that the
diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis, hepatitis B and
Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccines all contained trace
amounts of thimerosal. When the amount of mercury was added up,
however, public health officials realized that children could be
exposed to levels of mercury deemed unsafe by the EPA.
The AAP and CDC issued a statement calling for the removal of
thimerosal from all childhood vaccines based on the precautionary
principle, or that if it is possible to remove a potentially
harmful element from a product without doing harm to the integrity
of that product, then that element should be removed.
The decision seemed simple enough. Thimerosal could reasonably be
removed from vaccines, and vaccines could instead be manufactured in
single-dose vials.
But, according to Offit, the cautionary principle does not apply
in this case. By precipitously removing thimerosal there were a
number of consequences that were negative, he said.
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EPA guidelines
The EPA guidelines were based in large part on a study done in
Iraq in 1971. The Iraqi government unknowingly imported 90,000
metric tons of grain that had been fumigated with methylmercury, a
close chemical cousin of ethylmercury.
The grain was made into bread and distributed to farmers in Iraq.
The result, however, was over 6,000 hospitalizations and 450 deaths
due to excessive mercury exposure.
There were also babies born with neurologic damage to mothers who
had eaten the tainted bread. Researchers took the opportunity to
analyze hair samples from exposed mothers an indicator of chronic
exposure to find the lowest level of mercury present in mothers
who had children with mild neurologic damage.
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Researchers
recommended that children not be exposed to levels of
mercury that exceed their liberal estimate so as to
reduce the possibility of mercury poisoning. |
Once they had that information, the researchers took an extra
precautionary step and divided that number by 10. They recommended
that children not be exposed to levels of mercury that exceed their
liberal estimate so as to reduce the possibility of mercury
poisoning.
The EPA, in establishing its guidelines for U.S. children, took
that low number as their maximum allowable exposure limit. So, then,
children who may have been exposed to mercury through vaccination
were still exposed to levels of mercury 10 times below levels found
to be harmful.
But the EPA estimates were based on two incorrect assumptions,
according to Offit. First, the EPA assumed that methylmercury was
the same as ethylmercury, which is used to make thimerosal.
Methylmercury, though, has a half-life of around 50 days, while
for ethylmercury it is approximately seven days. As well, while
methylmercury actively enters the central nervous system,
ethylmercury does not.
There is a critical difference between these two molecules,
said Offit.
Secondly, the EPA assumed that in utero exposure, as was the case
in the Iraq study, would have the same harmful effects as exposure
after birth, as would be the case in vaccinated children. But that
is not the case, according to Offit.
We know from teratogenic agents and viruses that they are far
more likely to cause damage in utero than to an already developed
central nervous system ex utero, he said.
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Bad results
The removal of thimerosal was played up in the media as a
conclusion that thimerosal was dangerous. As a result, lawsuits have
been filed across the country seeking hundreds of millions of
dollars in damages and for medical monitoring.
The resulting litigation crisis has led several prominent vaccine
manufacturers to speculate whether they can even stay in business.
The thimerosal scare also led some hospitals to initially stop
giving the hepatitis B vaccine to newborn children, a decision that
resulted in chronic infections and deaths as a result of hepatitis
B.
The controversy also scared many parents, many of whom are now
afraid to have their children immunized, leaving them at risk for
potentially serious diseases. While the removal of thimerosal was
well intentioned, it had immediate fallout, and wound up doing more
harm than good. What we did, at best, was substitute a theoretical
risk for a real risk, and did harm, said Offit. |